Rhubarb – The Bitchy Gardener’s Plant Of The Day

If you love to eat rhubarb, you will not love this post. You will be thinking WTF is she doing letting that rhubarb bolt. But this bitch hates to eat rhubarb. She thinks the taste, even with the 60 pounds of sugar that people use to cook it, is a most bitter and disgusting experience for her tongue. 

 

 

When we moved to our current property twenty-seven years ago it came with a patch of rhubarb that I planned to get rid of but ignored for a few years because there were other things that needed attention. When I decided to start gardening on a major scale, my oldest stepson bought me a wonderful gardening book for Christmas that became my bible: Perennials for Every Purpose, by Larry Hodgson. The late Larry Hodgson, he passed away a few years ago, was a Canadian, based in Quebec. He understood our northern climate. He dumbed gardening down, which was perfect for me, a new gardener. His writing was also witty and practical making his book a very enjoyable experience. I have referred to that book so often over the years that the pages have started falling out. 

 

 

Larry placed rhubarb in the Perennials & Grasses for Dramatic Impact section, and that’s where my love for rhubarb began.

 

 

Rhubarb starts pushing through the ground early (April in my climate) and before you know it there are leaves and then stocks that are growing so fast that you want to check them every morning. 

 

 

The leaves are huge, heart shaped and beautiful. Some people actually use them as molds to create concrete garden ornaments or paths. 

 

 

The stocks shoot up to six feet or more in height and are covered with small white flowers that pollinators love.

 

 

The impact of my rhubarb plant in bloom is that of a drama queen and is something I look forward to every year. Who doesn’t want a little drama in their garden?

Thank you for reading

Photos: Jenn Stone

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31 thoughts on “Rhubarb – The Bitchy Gardener’s Plant Of The Day

  1. I adore rhubarb. My parents grew a big patch of it so I grew up eating it fresh. I never thought about trying to grow it here. Neighbors attempted to grow it, but it never took to our clay ground. [Or they didn’t know what they were doing, could be?]

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    1. I believe that every one tastes things differently and this changes as we age. I also find cranberries bitter and don’t eat them either.
      If you do want to try growing rhubarb, pick up a bag of garden soil and fill a generous hole with it instead of clay when you are transplanting.

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  2. I inherited a rhubarb plant at my house in MN and moved it to a more sunny spot where it thrived. I was thrilled to have it at that time. But after more than 20 years I got tired of it. I found several recipes and there is one for rhubarb apple crisp that people rave about and it is good. I just got tired of it. I never let those flowers bloom because I didn’t need more of it but it sure is pretty in your garden.

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  3. It’s a very showy plant for sure and makes a good ornamental. You definitely don’t have to eat those stalks if you don’t like them but I’ve known people who love to eat it raw with a bit of salt on it!

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  4. My garden is only big enough for one rhubarb plant – but I do love to eat it and that would be just enough for me. My Mum and me used to eat it raw! No sugar, nothing. Bet that made you cringe just thinking about it πŸ˜‰

    Mine didn’t get sunshine at my last house, it was in permanent shade. It used to grow quite tall but never really ripened to red stalks and I never saw flowers on it.

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  5. When I saw your post was about rhubarb, I immediately had flashbacks of having to eat it as a child. I haven’t heaten it in the last 50 years, but the thought of it still disgusts me. Doesn’t it also seem weird to you that we’re sticking vegetables in pies? Who thought that was a good idea?

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  6. My grandma used to make fresh strawberry rhubarb preserves from her garden. Would take our heads off until we added gobs of sugar. Not sure if we went past the saturation point but we did enjoy the taste of summer! 😊

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  7. We don’t eat rhubarb for the same reason as you do. We like the plant and have it growing at 4 places in our garden. We like its big leaves and its white flowers. But we don’t think that’s bitchy, not at all.
    The Fab Four of Cley
    πŸ™‚ πŸ™‚ πŸ™‚ πŸ™‚

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